 There's a beautiful story in books for you, the Ikhya. It's called Kitab-u-Vikr-e-Mawm-e-Mawm-e-Ba'ab-u by Abu-Hamr al-Azali. Ikhya, the leader of the Deen. It's a similar theologic of traditional Islam. He tells the story of a man who was a town drunkard and he opened fast. He used to spend his days in the habud, in the tavern in the bar, without drinking. And he died. And the people of the town refused to watch his body. We're not going to watch his body. He's a facet. You can't bury him on our cemetery either. So his poor wife had to wash his body and then she made some sled and took him all the way out into the desert with the intention of burying her husband and carrying over his body. While this was happening, she's digging this dish, a nostic in A'ab-e-billah, a nostic walks by, he sees the scene and he rushes down and he says I want to help you bury your husband. And she says, well, so if you bury his body, then you praise the Lord for it. And then she says, why did you want to help me? Do you know who my husband is? She said, yes, I know very well of your husband. And I wanted to help you. And she says, what do you mean? And he says, last night I had a dream and I heard a voice that said tomorrow you'll be traveling in the desert. You'll see a woman trying to bury her husband. Help her because her husband was a man of Jannah. He's a man of paradise, right? So he prays over the wine and then he leaves. Now the townspeople come out and they see what had happened. So they approach his wife and they say, why did he do that? And she says, I don't know. And they said, do you think of a reason why he's a man of Jannah? And she said, there's only three reasons I can think of. He was never devoid of one or two orphans that he would love and care for more than his own children. And every morning when he would wake up from his wine, he would change his clothes, make take a shower, and go and pray salat al-Fajr, fi jam'ah, fi mustah. He would pray in congregation in the mosque the morning prayer. And when he would come home from his wine, he would go into a secluded corner of the room, he'd fall down to his knees, he'd raise his hands to Allah, and say, O Allah, which corner of hell are you going to fill with this fresh hand? He referred to himself. And to be in that state of sublocation and repentance until he fell asleep. This is why we need to be in a state of Tawbah. The word Tawbah, as the terminology means, to turn. To turn. To go to Allah, literally, turn to Allah. Ya Tawbah, to ma alayna. O the most forgiving, turn towards us. To go to Allah, to ma alayna.